SEOUL: The foreign ministers of South Korea, China and Japan meet in South Korea on Sunday (Nov 26), seeking to restart cooperation among the Asian neighbours and pave the way for a trilateral summit.
While China and the United States have been mending frayed ties, including a summit this month between Presidents Xi Jinping and Joe Biden, Beijing is concerned that Washington and its key regional allies are strengthening their three-way partnership.
Beijing, Tokyo and Seoul had agreed to hold summits every year starting in 2008 to bolster diplomatic and economic exchanges, but the plan has been blocked by bilateral rows and the COVID-19 pandemic. Their last trilateral leaders’ meeting was in 2019.
The three top diplomats are gathering in the port city of Busan, also the first such meeting since 2019. In September, senior officials from the three countries agreed to arrange a trilateral summit at the “earliest convenient time”.
South Korean Foreign Minister Park Jin met separately on Sunday morning with his Japanese counterparts Yoko Kamikawa and China’s Wang Yi.
Park and Kamikawa condemned North Korea’s launch last week of its first spy satellite and agreed to boost responses to arms transactions between Pyongyang and Moscow, Seoul’s foreign ministry said in a statement.